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1 .TH BISON 1 local
2 .SH NAME
3 bison \- GNU Project parser generator (yacc replacement)
4 .SH SYNOPSIS
5 .B bison
6 [
7 .BI \-b " file-prefix"
8 ] [
9 .BI \-\-file-prefix= file-prefix
10 ] [
11 .B \-d
12 ] [
13 .B \-\-defines
14 ] [
15 .B \-k
16 ] [
17 .B \-\-token-table
18 ] [
19 .B \-l
20 ] [
21 .B \-\-no-lines
22 ] [
23 .B \-n
24 ] [
25 .B \-\-no-parser
26 ] [
27 .BI \-o " outfile"
28 ] [
29 .BI \-\-output-file= outfile
30 ] [
31 .BI \-p " prefix"
32 ] [
33 .BI \-\-name-prefix= prefix
34 ] [
35 .B \-r
36 ] [
37 .B \-\-raw
38 ] [
39 .B \-t
40 ] [
41 .B \-\-debug
42 ] [
43 .B \-v
44 ] [
45 .B \-\-verbose
46 ] [
47 .B \-V
48 ] [
49 .B \-\-version
50 ] [
51 .B \-y
52 ] [
53 .B \-\-yacc
54 ] [
55 .B \-h
56 ] [
57 .B \-\-help
58 ] [
59 .B \-\-fixed-output-files
60 ]
61 file
62 .SH DESCRIPTION
63 .I Bison
64 is a parser generator in the style of
65 .IR yacc (1).
66 It should be upwardly compatible with input files designed
67 for
68 .IR yacc .
69 .PP
70 Input files should follow the
71 .I yacc
72 convention of ending in
73 .BR .y .
74 Unlike
75 .IR yacc ,
76 the generated files do not have fixed names, but instead use the prefix
77 of the input file.
78 For instance, a grammar description file named
79 .B parse.y
80 would produce the generated parser in a file named
81 .BR parse.tab.c ,
82 instead of
83 .IR yacc 's
84 .BR y.tab.c .
85 .PP
86 This description of the options that can be given to
87 .I bison
88 is adapted from the node
89 .B Invocation
90 in the
91 .B bison.texinfo
92 manual, which should be taken as authoritative.
93 .PP
94 .I Bison
95 supports both traditional single-letter options and mnemonic long
96 option names. Long option names are indicated with
97 .B \-\-
98 instead of
99 .BR \- .
100 Abbreviations for option names are allowed as long as they
101 are unique. When a long option takes an argument, like
102 .BR \-\-file-prefix ,
103 connect the option name and the argument with
104 .BR = .
105 .SS OPTIONS
106 .TP
107 .BI \-b " file-prefix"
108 .br
109 .ns
110 .TP
111 .BI \-\-file-prefix= file-prefix
112 Specify a prefix to use for all
113 .I bison
114 output file names. The names are
115 chosen as if the input file were named
116 \fIfile-prefix\fB.c\fR.
117 .TP
118 .B \-d
119 .br
120 .ns
121 .TP
122 .B \-\-defines
123 Write an extra output file containing macro definitions for the token
124 type names defined in the grammar and the semantic value type
125 .BR YYSTYPE ,
126 as well as a few
127 .B extern
128 variable declarations.
129 .sp
130 If the parser output file is named
131 \fIname\fB.c\fR
132 then this file
133 is named
134 \fIname\fB.h\fR.
135 .sp
136 This output file is essential if you wish to put the definition of
137 .B yylex
138 in a separate source file, because
139 .B yylex
140 needs to be able to refer to token type codes and the variable
141 .BR yylval .
142 .TP
143 .B \-r
144 .br
145 .ns
146 .TP
147 .B \-\-raw
148 The token numbers in the \fIname\fB.h\fR file are usually the Yacc compatible
149 translations. If this switch is specified, Bison token numbers
150 are output instead. (Yacc numbers start at 257 except for single character
151 tokens; Bison assigns token numbers sequentially for all tokens
152 starting at 3.)
153 .TP
154 .B \-k
155 .br
156 .ns
157 .TP
158 .B \-\-token-table
159 This switch causes the \fIname\fB.tab.c\fR output to include a list of
160 token names in order by their token numbers; this is defined in the array
161 .IR yytname .
162 Also generated
163 are #defines for
164 .IR YYNTOKENS ,
165 .IR YYNNTS ,
166 .IR YYNRULES ,
167 and
168 .IR YYNSTATES .
169 .TP
170 .B \-l
171 .br
172 .ns
173 .TP
174 .B \-\-no-lines
175 Don't put any
176 .B #line
177 preprocessor commands in the parser file.
178 Ordinarily
179 .I bison
180 puts them in the parser file so that the C compiler
181 and debuggers will associate errors with your source file, the
182 grammar file. This option causes them to associate errors with the
183 parser file, treating it an independent source file in its own right.
184 .TP
185 .B \-n
186 .br
187 .ns
188 .TP
189 .B \-\-no-parser
190 Do not generate the parser code into the output; generate only
191 declarations. The generated \fIname\fB.tab.c\fR file will have only
192 constant declarations. In addition, a \fIname\fB.act\fR file is
193 generated containing a switch statement body containing all the
194 translated actions.
195 .TP
196 .BI \-o " outfile"
197 .br
198 .ns
199 .TP
200 .BI \-\-output-file= outfile
201 Specify the name
202 .I outfile
203 for the parser file.
204 .sp
205 The other output files' names are constructed from
206 .I outfile
207 as described under the
208 .B \-v
209 and
210 .B \-d
211 switches.
212 .TP
213 .BI \-p " prefix"
214 .br
215 .ns
216 .TP
217 .BI \-\-name-prefix= prefix
218 Rename the external symbols used in the parser so that they start with
219 .I prefix
220 instead of
221 .BR yy .
222 The precise list of symbols renamed is
223 .BR yyparse ,
224 .BR yylex ,
225 .BR yyerror ,
226 .BR yylval ,
227 .BR yychar ,
228 and
229 .BR yydebug .
230 .sp
231 For example, if you use
232 .BR "\-p c" ,
233 the names become
234 .BR cparse ,
235 .BR clex ,
236 and so on.
237 .TP
238 .B \-t
239 .br
240 .ns
241 .TP
242 .B \-\-debug
243 Output a definition of the macro
244 .B YYDEBUG
245 into the parser file,
246 so that the debugging facilities are compiled.
247 .TP
248 .B \-v
249 .br
250 .ns
251 .TP
252 .B \-\-verbose
253 Write an extra output file containing verbose descriptions of the
254 parser states and what is done for each type of look-ahead token in
255 that state.
256 .sp
257 This file also describes all the conflicts, both those resolved by
258 operator precedence and the unresolved ones.
259 .sp
260 The file's name is made by removing
261 .B .tab.c
262 or
263 .B .c
264 from the parser output file name, and adding
265 .B .output
266 instead.
267 .sp
268 Therefore, if the input file is
269 .BR foo.y ,
270 then the parser file is called
271 .B foo.tab.c
272 by default. As a consequence, the verbose
273 output file is called
274 .BR foo.output .
275 .TP
276 .B \-V
277 .br
278 .ns
279 .TP
280 .B \-\-version
281 Print the version number of
282 .I bison
283 and exit.
284 .TP
285 .B \-h
286 .br
287 .ns
288 .TP
289 .B \-\-help
290 Print a summary of the options to
291 .I bison
292 and exit.
293 .TP
294 .B \-y
295 .br
296 .ns
297 .TP
298 .B \-\-yacc
299 .br
300 .ns
301 .TP
302 .B \-\-fixed-output-files
303 Equivalent to
304 .BR "\-o y.tab.c" ;
305 the parser output file is called
306 .BR y.tab.c ,
307 and the other outputs are called
308 .B y.output
309 and
310 .BR y.tab.h .
311 The purpose of this switch is to imitate
312 .IR yacc 's
313 output file name conventions.
314 Thus, the following shell script can substitute for
315 .IR yacc :
316 .sp
317 .RS
318 .ft B
319 bison \-y $*
320 .ft R
321 .sp
322 .RE
323 .SH FILES
324 /usr/local/lib/bison.simple simple parser
325 .br
326 /usr/local/lib/bison.hairy complicated parser
327 .SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
328 .TP
329 .SM BISON_SIMPLE
330 If this is set, it specifies the location in which the
331 .B bison.simple
332 parser can be found.
333 .TP
334 .SM BISON_HAIRY
335 If this is set, it specifies the location in which the
336 .B bison.hairy
337 parser can be found.
338 .SH SEE ALSO
339 .IR yacc (1)
340 .br
341 The
342 .IR "Bison Reference Manual" ,
343 included as the file
344 .B bison.texinfo
345 in the
346 .I bison
347 source distribution.
348 .SH DIAGNOSTICS
349 Self explanatory.